Just like John Kennedy, Billy Graham, David Brinkley, Henry Kissinger, and many other radio and television personalities, there is an advertising guru with an unforgettable voice. Billy Mays. Billy Mays violates all the rules of capturing and keeping the attention of his audience. He communicates by screaming at you. He is grating in the extreme, yet we continue to listen.
More importantly, to his position at least, we continue to buy. That, however, is not a concern for the venerable pitchman who first came to us on The Shopping Channel. We doubt there is anyone in America who owns a TV that has not seen his infomercials somewhere sometime. He hawks and we purchase everything from OxiClean?, Orange Clean?, Kaboom?, Hercules Hook, Samurai Shark, and Zorbeeze, to onion slicers and dicers to epoxy, adinfinitum it seems.
Billy Mays is one of those people who could sell deep freezers to Eskimos. If he were a man of the cloth, he would surely be one of the renown preachers of our time with a mega church supported by multiple thousands of members ministering to (or fleecing as the case may be) untold thousands more via the internet, radio and television. Can you not picture him selling holy water and anointing oils and cloths?
Like lawyers, politicians, business moguls and preachers whose reputations precede them, Billy Mays is at the pinnacle of his career, and is sought after by everyone with anything to sell. If there is a product, such as snake oil, that is remotely marketable regardless of its value or sturdiness, Billy Mays can sell it.
Though we may not care to admit it, untold thousands of us have purchased "stuff" we did not need as a result of being swayed by the loud fast talking salesman. Knowing we have purchased defective products in the past as a result of Billy Mays' persuasion, it is almost like we can not help ourselves and we do it over and over and over again. Why? Maybe to shut him up. Most often, however, because he sells us not what we need but what we want to believe after he quickly creates a demand for the product dejur.
One can combine a nice trip, vacation, or other family outing with the experience to help ease the pain of that nagging feeling in the pit of your stomach that says, "I really should not do this" as you lay down hard earned cash for one of Billy's products. There are a couple of "As Seen On TV" (your first warning) Stores in the Pigon Forge, Tennessee and Gatlinburg, Tennessee areas. You can play with your new purchase while you feed the wild Tennessee Black Bears which you really should not do either.
Can't get to an "As Seen On TV" Store? Never mind. Billy Mays has created such a demand for these products that Wal-Mart, Walgreen's, and even Bed, Bath and Beyond and many other reputable retailers have started selling them. So, a trip to the corner pharmacy will open for you the world of items which Mays says can't be purchased in any store.
Billy Mays... Maijson posted on the Billy Mays Forum at World Warcraft, "HI I'M BILLY MAYES! AND I'VE MANAGED TO YELL EVEN LOUDER THAN I DID IN MY LAST COMMERCIAL!". Well, for the Tennessee Mountain Man that about said it all. Then Computer Man submitted this find from Alaerun, "Honestly Billy, theres no need to scream like someone has a tiki torch up your butt. We can hear you fine... Please bring it down a notch". But, hey, it works for him. We would not suggest trying this at home as Mays is a professional one of a kind pitchman. His tactics would not work for us and probably not for you either, but Billy keeps raking in the money... big money - your money.
Billy Mays Here With
On July 20, 1958, the proud parents of William D. Mays undoubtedly had no idea that their new born baby boy would grow up to scream his way into more living rooms than any other man in television history. But that he did. And whether you find his particular style of direct sales pitch vaguely amusing or utterly annoying, you cannot deny that Billy Mays has become one of the most recognizable faces on TV.
Mays began his carrier in the late 70's as a pitchman for Washmatik (a portable washing devise) to passersby on the Atlantic City Board Walk. Surrounded by older and more seasoned Pitchmen, Billy observed the “pros” at work until he developed his own, unique style. Billy then spent the next twelve years traveling across the country to home shows, trade shows and state fairs selling everything from cleaning products to food choppers.
After twelve years of living out of suite cases and sleeping in hotels, luck smiled on Billy. While attending the 1993 Pittsburg Home Show, Billy made the acquaintance of Max Appel, the founder of OrangeGlo International, a cleaning products manufacture based out of Denver. Billy soon signed on as the spokesman for Oxiclean, OrangeGlo, Orange Clean and Kaboom. Whether Billy realized it or not, he had been in the right place at the right time. This one chance meeting would launch him on a path to becoming a multi-millionaire and creating an ongoing love/hate relationship with millions of Americans.
Billy's first stab at promoting OrangeGlo products aired on the Home Shopping Network. His soon to be trademark sales technique featured “real time” demonstrations of Oxiclean's superior cleaning power. No matter what fool gunk he poured into his clear cleaning tank, Oxiclean totally eradicated it right before the potential buyers' eyes.
Billy's initial reviews were mixed. Objections to his abrasive manner of shouting at the TV audience were most noted. Objections aside, his results could not be denied. The Home Shopping Network experienced a dramatic increase in sales after his very first network début.
Billy's success on the Home Shopping Network was just the beginning. From there, he pitched 30 minute infomercials for late night TV. The phenomenal sales of OrangeGlo products late night infomercials soon sparked two and five minute pitch versions for day time TV. The two minute spots even managed to migrate to Prime Time TV on many cable channel networks.
Billy continued to shout the amazing effectiveness of OrangeGlo products through every TV set in America until OrangeGlo was ranked one of the top ten privately owned companies from 1999 to 2001 by Inc. magazine.
Just how effective is the direct response marketing industry? Devastatingly effective! Infomercials are estimated to be a 1.5 billion dollar industry. You may have shaken your head when you first saw the Snuggie commercial. You probably even asked yourself, who in their right mind would buy something like that. $80 million sales thus far appears to answer this question.
So as we sit on precipice of a global economic meltdown, industry giants have been reduced to common beggars. Work forces are being trimmed to the bone. Retailers slash prices to the barest of profit margins vying for their piece of the ever shrinking dollar. Corporate advertising has dropped 2.6 percent from last year. But amidst this ever increasing fear of a complete global meltdown, direct response advertising is up 9.2%.
And why is this? Because pitchmen like Billy Mays flat out know how to get you to open your wallet. You may think the likes of Billy Mays, loud, crass or even down right unprofessional, but one fact remains. Infomercials move products. And the bearded pitchman is the undisputed king of the infomercial industry.
Like him or not, if you own a TV, you have found yourself face to screen with the bearded man screaming, “Billy Mays here, for …”
And you probably have at least one of the cleaning products he introduced into the American vernacular in a cabinet somewhere in your home. KABOOM!
Both Burk Pendergrass & Stephen J. Broy are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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